Shelter in Poems with Kimiko Hahn, Poems for Memorial Day, Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation, and more

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May 19, 2020


Things That Are Changed—March, 2020


Kimiko Hahn

A bandana. A cardinal. An apple

No. 2 lead pencil—the mechanical pencil, now empty—appears more vivid 

A box of toothpicks—now that Im baking bran muffins

Rubber gloves: that Playtex commercial so flexible you can pick up a dime. I tried once and it's true. Thankfully, I have yellow rubber gloves—like those Mother wore. We never had a dishwasher. No, that was her, the dishwasher. Not even this gloomy daughter was assigned the chore. Though I did learn in Home Ec. to fill a basin with warm water and soap; wash glasses before the greasy dishes then silverware and finally pots and pans. Rinse. Air dry (it's more sanitary). And I do.

Scissors: I cut up dish clothes to use as napkins. When I try sewing on the ancient Singer (1930?), the knee-lever doesnt work so I abandon the hemming. Then hand stitch while listening to the news. I am grateful for a full spool of white thread. 

Scissors: where once I used these to cut paper, now I use them for everything. Including hair. Father always directed us to use the right kind of scissors for the task—paper, cloth, hair. Had he lasted into his nineties, how would he have dealt with sequestering? With belligerence, no doubt.

Empty jar: I think to grow beansprouts and look into ordering seeds. Back ordered until May 1.

Egg shells: should I start a mulch pile? Mother had a large empty milk carton by the sink where she'd add stuff to mulch. And now T reports that because they are making every meal, Our mulch pile is so alive.

Sleeping Beauty, yes, that cocoon—

Moby Dick, The Tale of Genji, Anna Karenina—I left Emily Dickinson—Selected Poems edited by Helen Vendler in my office

Notebook: March 20, 2020
A student in Elmhurst cannot sleep for the constant ambulance sirens. She keeps her blinds drawn but sees on tv what is taking place a block away—bodies in body bags loaded onto an enormous truck. The governor calls this The Apex. And late last night, R called—
helicopters are hovering over the building! She remembers the thrumming over our brownstone in Park Slope on 9/11. And just now I learn that religious people just blocks from her were amassing by the hundreds, refusing social distance. And I am full of rage. Some communities have begun to use drones to disperse people. The president states he has complete power.” And I am filled with rage.

Binoculars: a cardenal

102.7°F

Puzzling 

A neighbor goes out to pick up my prescription. I leave daffodils on the porch for him. I picked them with gloves on. 


Copyright © 2020 by Kimiko Hahn. Originally published with the Shelter in Poems initiative on poets.org.

Kimiko Hahn is the author of several books of poetry, most recently Foreign Bodies (W. W. Norton, 2020). She is a distinguished professor at the MFA program at Queens College and lives in Queens, New York. Read another shelter poem by Kimiko Hahn here.

Poems for Memorial Day


Spend time reflecting on Memorial Day with this collection of poems from Poets.org:

Memorial Day for the War Dead” by Yehuda Amichai 
the sonnet-ballad” by Gwendolyn Brooks
La Chapelle. 92nd Division. Ted.” by Rita Dove
The Long Deployment” by Jehanne Dubrow
“’You and I Are Disappearing’” by Yusef Komunyakaa
Armature” by Deborah Paredez
Ode in Memory of the American Volunteers Fallen for France” by Alan Seeger
Before the Battle” by Siegfried Sassoon 
Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night” by Walt Whitman
For the Confederate Dead” by Kevin Young

Artist Relief Conversations

The #ArtistRelief Conversation Series kicked off last week with Kristy Edmunds of UCLA’s Center for the Art of Performance and Lauren Snelling of the National YoungArts Foundation. They addressed the difficulties of returning to public gatherings and alternatives for artists and writers in a virtual landscape. Watch the conversation on the Artist Relief YouTube channel

Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation

Take a look at the Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation’s site to browse poems, educational materials, and films inspired by poetry.

May Guest Editor: Monica Youn

Thanks to Monica Youn, author of Blackacre (Graywolf Press, 2016), winner of the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America, who curated Poem-a-Day for this month. 

Last Week’s Poem-a-Day  


Revisit last week’s Poem-a-Day selections with us on Poets.org:

May 10: “VI—The Stare’s Nest By My Window” by W. B. Yeats 
May 11: “有 識: Have Knowledge” by Paisley Rekdal 
May 12: “Again Later” by Martha Collins
May 13: “Sage #3” by Marilyn Chin 
May 14: “Journey” by Lidija Dimkovska, translated by Ljubica Arsovska and Patricia Marsh Stefanovska
May 15: “Prayer” by Laura Kasischke
May 16: “Yesterday and To-morrow” by Paul Laurence Dunbar

COVID-19 Resources

Visit our COVID-19 page on poets.org, a roundup of websites that provide information about emergency funding and other resources for artists and arts organizations.

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